Now there's a story about Putin going fishing — and apparently catching a really big fish.

As the Los Angeles Times reports, claims about how big the pike the Russian president caught last weekend in Siberia ranged from 33 pounds to 46.3 pounds. The Russian blogosphere wasn't impressed.

"The Kremlin must have weighed the pike the way they count the votes," one observer wrote, according to the L.A. Times.

But these photographs, and criticism from his opponents and human rights groups aside, the Russian leader is still extremely popular — especially for the way he took on his country's oligarchs, who during the Yeltsin years became a law unto themselves.

As Christopher Read, a professor of 20th century European history at the University of Warwick, noted in a recent piece in The Atlantic:

"Putin's style has certainly been authoritarian, but to see oligarchs as human rights victims is to stretch the definition.

"Other elements of his popularity have been a more assertive international stance in which Russia shows independence in the face of American and western opposition — currently manifesting in the crisis in Syria, one of Russia's oldest allies — and a relatively successful economic policy which saw a period of growth, falling unemployment and rise in real wages, sometimes achieved by increasing state intervention in the economy, including the re-nationalization of factories and industries."

What is your favorite Putin moment? Let us know in the comments below.